Book Review: Me Before You

I loved Me Before You written by JoJo Moyes, an English journalist and romance novelist. I’m not usually a romance reader, yet I found Me Before You a fascinating love story, funny, surprising, sometimes tearful, and certainly thought provoking.

The story takes place in a small English village known for Stortford Castle, a well-known tourist attraction. Louisa Clark is, by most standards, eccentric. At 26, she has held the most menial jobs, the latest working in a café. But she loves serving customers. Her dress style is…flamboyant, not with any particular style. Let’s say she dresses with a style of her own. Although she comes from a loving, close-knit family, she is often the brunt of their jokes. Her younger sister has the “brains of the family” and is a university student. Her father’s employment situation is precarious and the family relies on Louise’s income.

Will Traynor comes from great wealth; in fact, his family owns Stortford Castle. He has much to show for his own achievements. Will loved life, had a successful business and was known for his dare-devil lifestyle. When, as a pedestrian, he is struck by a motorcycle, his injuries are severe and permanent. He is instantly a quadriplegic and must rely on others for his existence. His life is broken beyond repair and he is not compliant.

When the café where Louise works goes out of business, she is left without a job, a frightening possibility for her and her family. She goes to the employment office and interviews for a job caring for Will Traynor. Louisa and Will couldn’t have been more different. But as their lives intertwine, something unexpected happens.

When Louise learns that Will has shocking plans for his own life, she sets out to show him that life is worth living.

From Me Before You I learned a few things, too, about the world of a quadriplegic and all that it takes to sustain life. The novel is rich with English tradition and lifestyle, which I enjoy.

Book Review: Ordinary Magic

Ordinary Magic: Promises I Kept My Mother Through Life, Illness, and a Very Long Walk by Cameron Powell is an inspiring memoir about the sometimes rocky love between a mother and her son. On the day Cameron’s marriage ends, he learns from his German-born mother, Inge, that her cancer has returned. Incredibly, Inge wants her son to join her on the 500-mile walk of Camino de Santiago, a pilgrimage known in English as the Way of Saint James, located in northwestern Spain.

The two, mother and son, are joined by Cameron’s young cousin, Carrie, fifteen, and friends who act as guides in the first part of the walk, Julio and later, Ann Marie. They begin their journey in Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port in France, near the border with Spain.

The memoir, written mostly through Cameron’s journal and also includes thoughts from Inge’s journal, shows grit and determination along the often grueling journey. Inge suffers from not only from the effects of cancer, but also from infected feet. Cameron, too, has leg problems. At times one or the other rides a distance, but mostly they stick to walking up steep hills, as difficult to climb as to descend, and across barren or rocky land. They also trek through breath-taking lush landscapes. Accommodations are often uncomfortable with several people, and their assortment of snores, sleeping in a single room. Food is sometimes questionable, but they usually find nourishment along the way.

The 35-day trek ends at Camino de Santiago with visits to the magnificent Santiago de Compostela Cathedral in Galacia, Spain.

Cameron and his mother’s journey continues after they return home and Inge goes into her final agonizing journey with cancer. Cameron serves as her loving caregiver.

Ordinary Magic is often humorous with wry comments about life in general, and this walk in particular. It also contains many words of wisdom about living life to the fullest, embracing new experiences, and accepting sadness as a natural part of life.

 

Book Review: Unraveling Oliver

A psychological suspense, Unraveling Oliver by Liz Nugent, is a well-crafted novel told from several narrative points of view.

The story begins in Oliver Ryan’s voice. It’s 2011 in Dublin, Ireland. Oliver is a successful writer of award-winning children’s fantasy; his wife Alice illustrates his enormously popular books. The novel opens with Oliver contemplating his unconscious wife.

Subsequent chapters include other voices, people who make up the fabric of Oliver’s life. His childhood was a horror of neglect, anguish and envy. As various people come into his life, Oliver’s quiet rage and hate grow, providing a unique look at how a person might become a psychopath. Oliver is never likeable—the reader is always aware of his self-serving attitude—yet people are drawn to him, especially when he turns on his charm.

This suspense novel is not a whodunnit, but rather a whydunnit. Unraveling Oliver is a highly suspenseful, intricately woven story of a man who apparently has everything; that is, until his shocking secrets are unveiled.

 

Book Review: Before We Were Yours

Lisa Wingate’s riveting novel, Before We Were Yours, is based on true facts but written from the viewpoint of fictitious characters.

In 1939, Rill Foss, age 12, lives what she believes an idyllic life aboard a shanty houseboat on the Mississippi River. They move as the seasons change. The family never has much money but they have love, adventure, and freedom. Rill’s father leaves her in charge of her four younger siblings while he takes her mother to the hospital to deliver twins. While he’s gone uniformed “officials” wrench the children from their home, ostensibly to see their parents.

The children’s lives become a series of terrifying incidents through the notorious Tennessee Children’s Home Society, a true entity, and under the direction of infamous Georgia Tann, director of the adoption agency.

Alternating chapters with Rill’s story, Avery Stafford, a present-day federal prosecutor born into wealth and privilege, has a chance encounter with an older woman. A bracelet and an old photograph compel Avery to investigate what turns out to be her family’s long-hidden history.

Before We Were Yours is compelling, though troubling. The vivid characters and settings are believable. Knowing that the corrupt Tennessee Children’s Home portion of the book is based on fact makes for a chilling read. I highly recommend this novel, but it is not for the faint of heart.

 

Malheur National Wildlife Refuge

Over the past many years we have enjoyed visiting Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, located 32 miles south of Burns in the high desert country of southeastern Oregon. A mecca for birdwatchers and wildlife enthusiasts, Malheur is a crown jewel of the National Wildlife Refuge System.

Malheur National Wildlife Refuge was established on August 18, 1908, by President Theodore Roosevelt. The newly established “Lake Malheur Reservation” was the 19th of 51 wildlife refuges created by Roosevelt during his tenure as president. This large refuge now consists of 185,000 acres that include Malheur, Harvey and Mud Lakes, numerous ponds in the Blitzen Valley, alkali flats, towering rimrocks and sagebrush-covered hills.

One of the highlights of the refuge is a museum with nearly 200 mounted bird specimens, giving visitors a rare close-up view of the great diversify the area has to offer.

The 43-mile self-guided auto tour route offers wildlife observations and photography opportunities. It doesn’t take long to immerse yourself in this wilderness atmosphere and to witness a great abundance of life. The sharp call of the killdeer, the gentle quack of a cinnamon teal gathering her fuzzy offspring, and the heron’s motor-like throbbing take-off remind you whose home you’re visiting. The sometimes dank smell of the marsh and even the buzz of mosquitoes demonstrate the importance of an uninterrupted food chain, sometimes uncomfortable for humans but so necessary for wildlife survival.

In January, 2016 Malheur was closed when armed militants seized the headquarters and continued to occupy it until law enforcement made a final arrest in February. The militant organizers were seeking an opportunity to advance their view that the United States Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and other agencies are constitutionally required to turn over most of the federal public land they manage to individual states. Unfortunately, the take-over caused significant damage to tribal artifacts, safes were broken into with money, cameras and computers stolen, a new road was bulldozed, mutilating the surrounding area, and a boat launch was damaged when militants used the area for firearms training. After the occupation, Malheur continued its closure to ensure all explosives and dangerous materials were removed, to clean up the resulting mess, and to restore the grounds. After several months of closure, the refuge is now fully open and operational.

Besides birds and waterfowl, 58 mammal species presently reside within Malheur National Wildlife Refuge.

The Visitor Center is open Monday through Friday from 8:00 am to 4:00 pm and is staffed most weekends by volunteers.

If you’re in southeastern Oregon, be sure to take time to experience this special place.

Book Review: When I Found You

I loved this novel. Catherine Ryan Hyde’s When I Found You touched my heart with the two main characters, Nathan McCann and Nathan (Nat) Bates. The two bear the same name for a reason.

While duck hunting, Nathan McCann’s dog sniffs out a newborn baby boy, covered with leaves and wearing only a tiny knit cap and wrapped in an adult sweater. Even though it’s a chilly October morning, the infant is still alive and Nathan rushes him to the hospital. A search finds the baby’s mother, but she dies in custody. Nathan, a married middle-aged accountant, would like to adopt the child, but the baby’s grandmother claims custody.

Fifteen years later, Nat, the boy, named after the man who found him, appears with his grandmother on Nathan’s doorstep. She can no longer handle the sullen teenager and turns him over to Nathan. By this time, the boy is almost unreachable and immediately gets into serious trouble. Nathan promises the boy he will always stand by him. Slowly, slowly they begin to bond, even when loyalty is seriously challenged.

The novel spans several years as young Nat works toward his dream of becoming a professional boxer. When he suffers a trauma that changes their lives forever, both learn the strength and depth of their bond.

I loved the contrast between mild mannered, proper Nathan and Nat, a rebellious teen. I found the characters and the situations realistic in this poignant story of love, pain and trust.

 

Book Review: The Elephant Whisperer

The Elephant Whisperer: My Life with the Herd in the African Wild, a memoir written by Lawrence Anthony with Graham Spence, left me spellbound. I have always loved elephants. I lived in Africa for two years when my husband Bruce and I served with the Peace Corps in The Gambia, but there were no elephants in that region. In fact, where this book takes place in Zululand, South Africa, the people there had not seen elephants for more than 100 years.

In order to save a rogue herd of seven elephants, Lawrence Anthony agreed to take them in on Thula Thula, his 5,000 acre game reserve in Zululand. He was the herd’s last chance of survival: otherwise, they would be killed. Anthony had devoted his life to animal conservation, protecting the world’s endangered species. Adopting this herd of three adult females, three youngsters (one male, 2 females) and an adolescent bull, was a challenge that changed his life.

Taking in this herd required heavy-duty shoring up of the reserve boundaries. Elephants can do a lot of damage and the authorities, to say nothing of the village people, had no patience for rogue elephants, the world’s largest land animal, and the damage they can wreak.

Anthony and his French wife, Françoise, devoted their lives to the reserve. The bond they formed worked both ways: the elephants learned they could trust Anthony, and he learned about life, loyalty, and the meaning of freedom from them. But it wasn’t without struggle, not only with the elephants, but with the village people, and the constant worry of poachers.

This memoir is rich in Africa’s wildness and its culture. Anthony also earned trust and loyalty among his staff. They eventually built a lodge where guests could view the wildlife as they rode through the reserve in Land Rovers. There were moments, however, where the guests got more excitement than they bargained for. To have a successful wild game reserve also required cooperation from local authorities and Anthony’s many encounters with tribal chiefs showed their reverence and respect toward him. At times the reserve’s existence was held in the balance of centuries-old tribal wars and boundary disputes.

The Elephant Whisperer has its funny moments and its sad, wrenching moments, but most of all it is a heartwarming story of an unrelenting effort to protect our world’s wildlife. I highly recommend this memoir.

Book Review: And This Is How I Lived

Carolyn Wing Greenlee has compiled an intriguing collection of stories in And This Is How I Lived: Stories from overlanders, immigrants, settlers, and pioneers who made new lives in difficult places.

Among the stories runs a thread of what it took to make America great. Although injustices abounded, especially among hard-working Chinese, their dedication shone through. I especially loved the stories about the author’s family and her Chinese heritage.

Many of these previously printed stories are precious glimpses of history, particularly of early California. I loved Greenlee’s quote: “What seems insignificant today becomes treasured memories later.” The author has captured the spirit of dedication to family and what it means to be a part of a shared humanity.

One of the lessons I came away with in reading this collection is how tasks at the time may seem minor, but upon reflection we realize the difference we have made in a productive future.

And This Is How I Lived is a treasure to be remembered.

 

Book Review: The Plover

Brian Doyle’s The Plover is a sea adventure with intriguing twists. A delightful, imaginative novel, the book was especially meaningful to me since I too spent time at sea, also in the South Pacific.

When Declan O’Donnell goes to sea in his converted 28-foot sailing trawler, the Plover, he’s glad to be alone, away from the complications and meanness of people, of obligations, and the trappings of land-life. He just wants to be alone and free to do as he pleases.

With no one but a gull for company, he sets sail across the vast Pacific. Nearing an island, he’s met by a fellow rowing a boat who has a written message for Declan. The message implores Declan to allow a friend from his past, a recent widower, and his mute, crippled daughter to join him. Although it isn’t what Declan has in mind, he can’t refuse his friend this favor; the man and daughter have been through so much grief.

Back to sea, they encounter an old rusty cargo ship with an unscrupulous captain. A brief encounter results in Declan’s friend being shanghaied into service aboard the cargo ship. Declan, of course, can’t allow this and not only manages to get his friend back, but also an unhappy crewman from the cargo ship as well. The crewman happens to be a woman, an islander, who immediately takes to the little crippled girl.

Along the way, they pick up other needy passengers. What was intended to be a one-person crew has now turned into six. In the meantime, the cargo ship stalks them, a ship with far greater power than the Plover.

The Plover is full of maritime wisdom, explorations of the human spirit, and one man’s quest for peace. I heartedly recommend this delightful novel.

Oh, Heavens: Pine Mountain Observatory

You don’t have to be a hard-core stargazer to enjoy Pine Mountain Observatory, but if you are an astronomer, this is the place for you. The observatory, located 34 miles southeast of Bend, Oregon, is operated by the University of Oregon Department of Physics under a special use permit from the Deschutes National Forest.

The observatory’s large telescopes allow excellent views of the moon and bright planets. As the sky darkens, tour guides show visitors objects through the various telescopes. A guided binocular tour is also available on some nights. Tour guides point out a variety of celestial objects, including constellations, visible with the naked eye. Questions and comments are welcomed.

Pine Mountain Observatory’s primary function is research and other astronomical observations, including basic and advanced scientific research. However, education at all levels is also an important function and objective of the observatory.

Visitors are welcome on Friday and Saturday evenings, weather permitting, starting Memorial Day through September. “Dark Moon” weekends are best; full moon weekends are least favorable. To see the moon itself, the weekend closest to First Quarter Moon is best.

In the heat of summer, camping here is ideal with 6,300-foot elevation and subsequent cool evenings. The primitive Forest Service Campground, open on a first-come, first-served basis, is located just across the road from the observatory. The camp area consists of four drive-in and ten hike-in sites. There are no camping fees. The camp has one outhouse, but no power hookups, water or trash service. Camping is permitted every day of the week.

Even if your visit doesn’t include observatory viewing, the area offers splendid mountain scenes and hiking.

For more information about Pine Mountain Observatory visit https://pmo.uoregon.edu/visiting/